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Thee Ohio State University News

So, if I can take this off track for a quick question because I can't find a general sports facilities thread for this one...is anyone aware of any kind of public tour/access for other athletics facilities like the Covelli Center or St. John Arena? I'll probably shell out the $100 for a stadium tour on my trip up for the Miami game, and am going to check into the Schott tour cost, and know I can pop into the Woody to admire the trophies, but figured a few of you might know if there are any options for the other major facilities. Primarily interested in getting pictures in them (empty, might use Skull Session to get a picture with people in St. John), especially with that great new floor in St. John. Can't find anything besides the Stadium tour on the official website, so I'm expecting it will be a dead end.

Anyway, back to trademark shenanigans.
 
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‘FISHING’ FOR SPONSORSHIPS: EMPLOYERS PAY FOR GRADUATE BUSINESS DEGREES

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The hook, line and sinker for some Ohio State business students is the lure of employers sponsoring their graduate degrees.

Over the past three years, 36 percent of all graduate students enrolled in any program at the Fisher College of Business have been sponsored in some form by their employer, according to data from the college obtained by The Lantern.

“Fisher is at the high end because that’s what they do. They’re the business school, working with business partners on a regular basis, so they are probably at the forefront for that,” Alicia Bertone, dean of Ohio State graduate school, said.

According to the data, 82 percent of company-sponsored students are enrolled in one of Fisher’s part-time or hybrid programs, including the Master of Business Administration for working professionals, Master of Human Resource Management and specialized Master of Business and Analytics.

Of the part-time and hybrid programs, the MBA for working professionals accounts for the highest percentage of graduate students — at 69 percent — who have been sponsored in some way by their employers over the past three years.

In comparison, the next highest sponsored degree is the Master of Accounting, for which 16 percent of graduate students were sponsored over the past three years.

Fisher partners with companies to help encourage employers to fund students, so they can go back to school and get their master’s degree, Bertone said.

“I am aware that Fisher has two master programs that are funded by employers — one is with Chase, and one is by Honda — and they fund to have those students come and get their master’s degree,” Bertone said.

Paul North, executive director of the graduate programs office at Fisher, said in an email that employers have different views on how much time and money should be invested in their employees going back to school for their master’s degrees.

“Some employers may have a training or tuition benefit that will pay for part of a program and allow their employees to go to school part time or after hours, while others may allow a leave of absence to attend a full-time program,” North said. “These employers are willing to invest in their staff and understand the great value that ongoing, higher education can provide in retaining and promoting employees.”

Data from Fisher’s Executive Education Programs Office shows that of the 26 students who have been admitted or have interviews scheduled for the Master of Business Operational Excellence, 58 percent reported they were receiving full employer funding.

Of the 26 students, four reported they will not be receiving any employer funding at all.

Within the Executive MBA degree program, 12 of the incoming students reported financial information to Fisher, according to data from the executive office. Of the 12 students, half reported receiving full employer funding, while two reported no funding at all.

For students who do not receive employer funding, Bertone said there are many ways students can have graduate school paid for through Ohio State.

“A large number of our graduate students are funded through GRA-ships, what we call our graduate appointments, fellowships, through some of our stipend match programs, and right now we have 4,044 doctoral students who are on one of those forms of support,” Bertone said.

Entire article: https://www.thelantern.com/2019/10/...-employers-pay-for-graduate-business-degrees/
 
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OSU completes review of Jeffrey Epstein's donations to school

The Ohio State University has completed its review of giving by the late Jeffrey Epstein, the university announced in a statement on Thursday. Ohio State will contribute $336,000 to the Ohio Attorney General’s Human Trafficking Initiative after the review found that the university received up to that amount in donations and pledges from Epstein and the J. Epstein Foundation between 1990-1997.

"All of the donations in question were made to the Wexner Center for the Arts at least two decades ago and many years before any questions about Epstein surfaced," a statement from the university read. "However, the university has determined that, in light of Epstein’s reprehensible crimes, retaining these gifts would not be consistent with the university’s values."

The university also reported a $2.5 million gift from the COUQ Foundation, Inc., which Epstein was a director and officer for, from July 2007. The review was conducted by Ernst & Young, which had full access to Ohio State's giving records and related documentation and historical documentation maintained by the Wexner Center, per the university.

From Ohio State:

EY confirmed documentation demonstrating that gifts were received from the J. Epstein Foundation in the amount of $260,000 from 1990 to 1997. One additional document noted a potential total of $335,000 in gifts. While the review could not confirm receipt of the additional $75,000 pledged, the university opted to make a donation to the Ohio Attorney General’s Human Trafficking Initiative that equals the amount of the larger figure of funds received or pledged, including the $1,000 membership fund gift originally identified in July.

The university also reported in July a 2007 gift of $2.5 million from the COUQ Foundation, Inc., of which Epstein was a director and officer. The review found that this gift, which supported a renovation of the Woody Hayes Athletic Center, originated from the Wexner Children’s Trust and the Leslie H. Wexner Charitable Fund and not from Jeffrey Epstein."

Epstein, an investor from New York, pleaded guilty and was convicted in 2008 by a Florida court of procuring an underage girl for prostitution and of soliciting a prostitute, for which he served 13 months in custody but with an extensive six-day-per week work release during that time.

Eleven years later in July 2019, Epstein was arrested and then charged two days later by prosecutors with the Public Corruption Unit of the Southern District of New York with sex trafficking and conspiracy to traffic minors for sex in both New York and Florida. On July 23, several weeks after being charged, Epstein was found injured and semiconscious in his jail cell in New York, with marks around his neck.

On Aug. 10, Epstein, who had been placed on suicide watch following the July incident, was found dead in his jail cell. Epstein's death was ruled as a suicide by the medical examiner.

Entire article: https://247sports.com/college/ohio-...-ohio-human-trafficking-initiative-145879537/
 
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Cool story about two alumni who may not have been famous but led very interesting, full lives.

https://www.pittwire.pitt.edu/news/...r-career-embracing-cultural-diversity-dies-96

Before starting her 54-year career at Pitt in the 1960s, Bruhns immersed herself in different cultures of the world with her husband, Fred C. Bruhns, who she met while studying at the Ohio State University. Fred immigrated to the United States from Germany in 1941 after serving two years in a Berlin prison for anti-Nazi activity. The two were married from 1946 until his death in 2008.

Bruhns and her husband spent 15 years living overseas, working with refugees in countries including Cambodia, Greece, Lebanon and Vietnam. While abroad, Bruhns completed her master’s degree, taught English and did humanitarian work. Fred worked with the United States Agency for International Development, eventually serving as the head of the United Nations’ High Commissioner for Refugees’ office in Athens, Greece.

 
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Ohio State edged out Case Western as the state's second best (clearly everyone else is competing for runner up to the Cleveland Clinic) hospital in the state in USNWR rankings out today.

Cleveland Clinic
The Clinic ranked earned national rankings in 14 of 16 specialties, including top-five rankings in nine of them.
  • 1st in cardiology and heart surgery
  • 2nd in geriatrics
  • 2nd in gynecology
  • 2nd in rheumatology
  • 3rd in gastroenterology and GI surgery
  • 4th in pulmonology and lung surgery
  • 4th in urology
  • 5th in cancer
  • 5th in nephrology
  • 6th in diabetes and endocrinology
  • 9th in neurology and neurosurgery
  • 9th in orthopedics
  • 10th in ophthalmology
  • 16th in ear, nose and throat
Ohio State University’s Wexner Medical Center
U.S. News’ second-best hospital in the state, OSU’s Wexner Medical Center, earned national rankings in nine specialties.
  • 5th in ear, nose and throat
  • 12th in rehabilitation
  • 25th in diabetes and endocrinology
  • 25th in pulmonary and lung surgery
  • 30th in cancer
  • 32nd in nephrology
  • 34th in neurology and neurosurgery
  • 46th in cardiology and heart surgery
  • 46th in urology

University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center (Case Western)
The health system’s Cleveland campus ranked third among Ohio hospitals, boosted by national rankings in seven categories.
  • 25th in nephrology
  • 26th in urology
  • 28th in cardiology and heart surgery
  • 35th in neurology and neurosurgery
  • 37th in cancer
  • 39th in gastroenterology and GI surgery
  • 46th in ear, nose and throat
 
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Interesting article in the Massilion press talking about whether Ohio State has abandoned its land-grant role. Ed Jennings exactly nailed it in his discussions with legislators and business leaders in the early 80s when he would tell them, "Ohio can have either a world class flagship university with all the intellectual and economic benefits that brings to the state or it can have an open admissions university. It can't have both."

https://www.indeonline.com/news/202...50-years-has-its-land-grant-mission-evolved/1
 
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Ohio State edged out Case Western as the state's second best (clearly everyone else is competing for runner up to the Cleveland Clinic) hospital in the state in USNWR rankings out today.

Ohio has some great hospitals for sure. And don't forget about the children's hospitals: Cincinnati Children's #3 overall in the nation (UC academic affiliation with plenty of Ohio State grads) and Nationwide Children's #8 in the nation (Ohio State academic affiliation).
 
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Ohio has some great hospitals for sure. And don't forget about the children's hospitals: Cincinnati Children's #3 overall in the nation (UC academic affiliation with plenty of Ohio State grads) and Nationwide Children's #8 in the nation (Ohio State academic affiliation).

In one of my last weeks on the old Shag, I got sick of their constant badmouthing Columbus as some kind of apocalyptic hellhole, so I posted a bunch of comparisons between it and Austin: USNWR top hospitals, USNWR top high schools, Golf magazine top golf courses, Fortune 100, 500 and 1000 headquarters, gross metropolitan product overall and per capita and maybe a couple others that I can't remember. Columbus--in category after category--cold smoked Austin. Of course, the only response was petty insults.
 
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In one of my last weeks on the old Shag, I got sick of their constant badmouthing Columbus as some kind of apocalyptic hellhole, so I posted a bunch of comparisons between it and Austin: USNWR top hospitals, USNWR top high schools, Golf magazine top golf courses, Fortune 100, 500 and 1000 headquarters, gross metropolitan product overall and per capita and maybe a couple others that I can't remember. Columbus--in category after category--cold smoked Austin. Of course, the only response was petty insults.


Hipster Doofuses.

There is no way Columbus has more Hipster Doofuses per capita than Austin Texas. It's impossible.
 
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In one of my last weeks on the old Shag, I got sick of their constant badmouthing Columbus as some kind of apocalyptic hellhole, so I posted a bunch of comparisons between it and Austin: USNWR top hospitals, USNWR top high schools, Golf magazine top golf courses, Fortune 100, 500 and 1000 headquarters, gross metropolitan product overall and per capita and maybe a couple others that I can't remember. Columbus--in category after category--cold smoked Austin. Of course, the only response was petty insults.

How do BBQ choices stack up?
 
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